Uyghur Attack on Police Station Leaves Three Dead, Two Injured
JANUARY 22, 2013— Chinese authorities have shot dead three Uyghurs who attacked a police
station in northwestern China’s restive Xinjiang region, officials said Wednesday, calling
it an act of “separatism.”
The attack on the Yengieriq town police station in Aksu prefecture’s Awat county a week
ago is the latest in a string of raids by Uyghurs who exile rights groups say could be
retaliating against discrimination by Chinese authorities on the ethnic minority group.
Xuan Xin, the police chief of nearby Dolan town, said that the attack by three young
Uyghur men was being investigated by national security authorities.
“I was not informed about the attackers’ intention, though I’m assuming that they wanted
to express their discontent with our government,” he told RFA’s Uyghur Service.
“Like many other previous incidents, this was also likely motivated by separatism,” he
said of the Jan. 15 attack, which RFA had learned about following a tip off.
The three Uyghur men had approached auxiliary guards at the police station complex and
asked to meet with the station chief, according to Abdusalam Rozi, a policeman from
Dolan.
“The auxiliary policemen who were guarding the door did not let them in, saying that the
chief was in a meeting,” he said.
“During the ensuing argument, the guards realized the youths had something around their
waists and demanded to search them. As they were about to be searched, the three young men
took out sickles from inside their jackets and attacked the guards, injuring two of
them.”
Rozi said that during the melee “other police inside the building shot the Uygur youths to
death.”
Gao Hai, the vice chief of police in Dolan, said one of the auxiliary guards had been
severely injured in the attack.
“They are being treated at the county hospital. One is injured around the waist, while the
other’s condition is more severe.”
Gao said that the Uyghur youths were from the Qumeriq and Lenger villages of Yengieriq
town, but said he did not know their names.
In recent months, dozens of Uyghurs accused by the authorities of terrorism and separatism
have been shot dead in lightning raids in Xinjiang, home to some 10 million mostly Muslim
Uyghurs.
On Dec. 30, Chinese authorities in Yarkand (in Chinese, Shache) county near the Silk Road
city of Kashgar opened fire and killed eight Uyghurs who they said attacked a police
station, calling them "terrorists" and "religious extremists."
At least 91 people, including several policemen, have been killed in violence in Xinjiang
since April, state media reported.
Rights groups and experts say Beijing exaggerates the terrorism threat to take the heat
off domestic policies that cause unrest or to justify the authorities' use of force
against Uyghurs.
Enver Molla, a police chief from nearby Tamtoghraq town, told RFA that since last week’s
incident “security measures had been increased” in Yengieriq.
But he said that the attack was a “matter of national security” and refused to provide
details, referring inquiries to the provincial public security office.
Respecting traditions
The attack occurred on the same day of the arrest of outspoken Uyghur scholar Ilham Tohti
in Beijing which Uyghur rights groups say underscored the Chinese government's
increasingly hardline stance on dissent surrounding Xinjiang.
Tohti, who has been critical of official policy in Xinjiang, was detained on suspicion of
"breaking the law," according to the Chinese government which had come under
fire from the United States and the European Union for the action.
Uyghur exile groups say Chinese authorities in Xinjiang have launched a New Year “strike
hard” campaign targeting cell phones, computers, religious materials and other “cultural
products” belonging to Uyghurs.
Dilxat Raxit, spokesman for the exile World Uyghur Congress (WUC) group, told RFA recently
that the government had been “stepping up these raids, even to the point of armed police
shooting Uyghurs who refuse to cooperate and offer some kind of resistance.”
He warned that “any provocation could lead to further violence.”
Meanwhile, the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s Xinjiang chief Zhang Chunxian called
Wednesday for ethnic traditions in Xinjiang to be respected.
Zhang said that the government must “treat issues of local tradition with respect and
resolve issues of violence with rule of law and severe measures,” Reuters news agency
reported, citing his comments in the official Xinjiang Daily.
“[The government] must acknowledge the long-term, acute and complex nature of the
anti-separatism and violent terrorism fight,” he said, adding that there was no
contradiction between stability and development.
Uyghurs say they have long suffered ethnic discrimination and oppressive religious
controls under Beijing’s policies, blaming the problems partly on the influx of Han
Chinese into the region.
Reported by Shohret Hoshur for RFA’s Uyghur Service. Translated by Mamatjan Juma. Written
in English by Joshua Lipes.
View this story online at:
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/uyghur/attack-01222014184920.html
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